The primary goal of this site is to provide mature, meaningful discussion about the Vancouver Canucks. However, we all need a break some time so this forum is basically for anything off-topic, off the wall, or to just get something off your chest! This forum is named after poster Creeper, who passed away in July of 2011 and was a long time member of the Canucks message board community.

So, I tried finding a controversial topic to post in, but I had no takers. So, there goes that avenue of amusement. How about something practical? I thought to myself, self, if nobody wants to once and for all settle the debate around socio-economic systems and varioius isms, why not see if you can draw on the collective wisdom of the forum for some gardening advice.

What's up with cauliflower and brocolli. I planted these in my garden boxes, in a green house of sorts, and all the did was turn in to giant, unruly plants. I think I probably planted them too close together and I have since come to learn that cauliflower likes cooler temperatures, but, now that my plants are totally out of hand, can they be salvaged? Should I just slash and burn?

Or would y'all rather discuss the relative merits of socialism, versus capitalism, versus facism, versus assorted other isms?+

How about... Vegans have nor more respect for life than ominivores. Life is life man and any time you snuff out a life to feed your parasitic self it's a killing. Killing a carrot is like killing a cow!

I have a small vegetable garden every other year. It's a lot of work for something that I can get at the farmer's market. About the only thing that grows well in this soil is tomatoes and peppers. WTF was I thinking try to grow lettuce??

I see no reason for flowers. If I'm going to take care of a plant, I want to eat part of it later on.

Cornuck wrote:I have a small vegetable garden every other year. It's a lot of work for something that I can get at the farmer's market. About the only thing that grows well in this soil is tomatoes and peppers. WTF was I thinking try to grow lettuce??

I see no reason for flowers. If I'm going to take care of a plant, I want to eat part of it later on.

Cornuck a herbavore.....omnivore...anyways from my understanding in the world of green thumbs it Is not so much the crop as It Is the emotional medicinal therapeutic value...that Is gardening

Cornuck wrote:I have a small vegetable garden every other year. It's a lot of work for something that I can get at the farmer's market. About the only thing that grows well in this soil is tomatoes and peppers. WTF was I thinking try to grow lettuce??

I see no reason for flowers. If I'm going to take care of a plant, I want to eat part of it later on.

Agreed. But I find tomatoes and such too fickle. You need to plant new ones every year!

I prefer trees and bushes. We have two apple trees, two cherry trees (one sour, one sweet) a plum tree and a pear tree. We also have black and red currants, gooseberries, raspberries and blackberries. Trees and bushes don't need to be babied the way vegetables demand. Some fertiliser, the occassional pruning and that's it. Of course, stupid birds steal most of the cherries, but still. The fruit trees look pretty in the spring, and then they give you food in late summer/ fall. What more can you ask for?

Right - rhubarb! You need something to make pies of in spring/ early summer, till the fruits and berries are ripe. Gotcha.